Cornish grammar


Cornish grammar is the grammar of the Cornish language, an insular Celtic language closely related to Breton and Welsh and, to a lesser extent, to Irish, Manx and Scottish Gaelic. It was the main medium of communication of the Cornish people for much of their history until the 17th century, when a language shift occurred in favour of English. A revival, however, started in 1904, with the publication of A Handbook of the Cornish Language, by Henry Jenner, and since then there has been a growing interest in the language.

Initial consonant mutation

Initial mutation is a feature shared by all the modern Celtic languages, in which the initial consonant of a word may change under some circumstances. In Cornish these changes take place when a word starts with one of the consonants shown in the table below; other initial consonants remain unchanged. The most common mutation occurs after the definite article an, when followed by a feminine singular noun or masculine plural noun.
Unmutated
consonant
Soft
mutation
Aspirate
mutation
Hard
mutation
Mixed
mutation
pbf
tdth
kgh
bvpf
ddhtt
gdisappearskh
gwkhw
gwwkwhw
mvf
chj

Nouns

Gender

Cornish nouns, like those of other Celtic languages, possess two grammatical genders, meaning that they belong to one of two groups: masculine or feminine. Sometimes the gender of a noun can be inferred from the class of words it belongs to, for example, nouns referring to males, such as gour “man, husband” or tarow “bull”, or verbal nouns, such as kerdhes “walking” and bos “being”, are masculine whereas nouns referring to females, such as hwor “sister” and yar “hen”, are feminine. Nevertheless, it is often impossible to determine the gender of a noun from its form, although certain nominal suffixes have gender:
  • Masculine suffixes: -adow, -der/''-ter, -di/-ji/-ti, -ik, -la, -eth, -our, -ans, -yas, -ydh, -er, -yn, -or
  • Feminine suffixes: -a, -ek, -el, -en, -es, -ieth
There is a very small number of nouns which may be either gender, such as nev “heaven” and tonn “grassland”, and is similar to its sister language Breton in that the noun tra “thing” takes masculine numerals above one and masculine referring pronouns but has the mutations of a feminine noun after an “the”, unn'' “one” and on accompanying adjectives.

Number

Singular and plural

Most nouns have a singular and plural form, the latter deriving from the former in a number of ways. Plural forms may add an ending to a singular, such as treth “beach” to trethow, pompyon “pumpkin” to pompyons and lader “thief” to ladron. Adding an ending may be accompanied by a vowel change, as in the case of gwreg “wife” to gwragedh and hwor “sister” to hwerydh, or may involve a vowel change alone, for example korn “horn” to kern and men “stone” to meyn.

Dual

A small number of nouns display relics of a dual system. These are formed by prefixing masculine dew or feminine diw, both “two”, to the respective noun. Dual nouns are often parts of the body and indicate the pair of them taken together, for instance, lagas “eye” to dewlagas “ eyes” and bregh “arm” to diwvregh “ arm”. These carry a different meaning to the regular plural forms, such as lagasow or lagajow “eyes” and breghow “arms”, which do not indicate a matching pair.

Collective and singulative

A distinctive and unusual feature of Brythonic languages is that of collective and singulative number. The base form of some Cornish nouns denotes a class or group, often natural objects, such as sab “pine trees”, kelyon “flies” and niwl “fog”. A singulative is formed by adding the feminine ending -en to denote a single individual of the group, hence saben “a pine tree”, kelyonen “a fly” and niwlen “a patch of fog”. Singulatives can themselves have plural forms in -ow, denoting a number of individuals of the group, so for instance, kelyonen gives kelyonennow “ flies ”.

Determiners

Articles

Cornish lacks an indefinite article, but has a definite article, an, which precedes the noun, for example an Kernow “the Cornishman” and an Kernowesow “the Cornishwomen”. The article causes a soft mutation on feminine singular nouns, such as Kernowes “Cornishwoman” to an Gernowes “the Cornishwoman”, and on masculine plural nouns denoting persons, as Kernowyon “Cornishmen” to an Gernowyon “the Cornishmen”, although exceptions to the latter include an tasow “the fathers” and clear English borrowings such as an doktours “the doctors”. Also the masculine plural nouns meyn ”stones” and mergh ”horses” are exceptions, which are lenited to an veyn ”the stones” and an vergh ”the horses”, respectively. An is shortened to 'n after certain function words that end in a vowel, meaning a “of”, dhe “to” and ha “and” become a'n “of the”, dhe'n “to the” and ha'n “and the”, and in addition, yn “in” becomes identically pronounced y'n “in the”.

Demonstrative determiners

The definite article and a noun followed by the clitics ma and na to produce the demonstratives “this/these” and “that/those” respectively, for example an lyver ma “this book” and an lyvrow na “those books”.

Possessive determiners

The possessive determiners are as follows. Notice their similarity to the more reduced forms of the personal pronouns.

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

Personal pronouns in Cornish can be arranged as follows.
Independent personal pronouns are used as the subject of a nominal sentence, for example My a grys “I believe”, or can stand before the verb in a verbal sentence to draw attention to the subject implied by the verb, for example Ni ny yllyn mosWe cannot go”. Certain other constructions employ independent pronouns, such as those based on verbal nouns, like ev dhe dhos omma “ he came here”, and those that follow conjunctions, such as hag i ow kortos “as they are/were waiting”.
Suffixed pronouns are attached to nouns in possessive constructions, to inflected verbs and to pronouns and are used to reinforce a pronoun previously expressed by a verbal or personal ending, for example Ple eth hi? “Where did she go?”.
Reduced pronouns are used between a verbal particle and a verb, such as in mar ny’th welav “if I don't see you”.

Demonstrative pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns display two degrees of proximity as well as gender and number.
These pronouns lose their final a before yw “is” and o “was”, for example Homm yw ow keniterow “This is my cousin”.

Adjectives

Cornish adjectives usually come after the noun they modify although a few may come before or after, such as drog “bad” and leun “full”, and a small number always precede the noun, such as lies “many” and hen “old, long-standing”. There are simple and derived adjectives. The former comprise adjectives that are not derived of any other word, whereas the latter are formed by adding suffixes such as -ek to the end of a noun. Adjectives are lenited when they are preceded by a feminine singular noun, or a masculine plural noun referring to persons, e.g. benen goth 'an old woman', mebyon vyghan 'small sons'.

Comparison

Adjectives are inflected with -a to give a comparative/superlative form. This suffix causes provection of the adjective stem, for example glyb “wet” to glyppa and krev “stong” to kreffa. A number of adjectives are irregular and have separate comparative and superlative forms.
positivecomparativesuperlative
byghan, “small” nebes “little” le “smaller, fewer, less”liha “smallest, fewest, least”
da, mas “good”gwell “better”gwella “best”
drog “bad”gweth, lakka “worse”gwetha “worst”
isel “low”isella, is “lower”isella, isa “lowest”
meur “much, great”moy “more, greater”moyha “most, greatest”
ogas “near”nes “nearer”nessa “nearest”

Adverbs

Adverbials in Cornish may be a single word or a more complex phrases, for example ena “then” and y’n eur ma “now”, literally “in this hour”. Many are formed from the combination of a preposition and a noun or pronoun, such as war-woles “downwards” from war “on” and goles “bottom” and a-ji “within” from a “from, at” and chi “house”. Adverbs can be formed from adjectives by means of the particle yn, such as in the case of krev “strong” to yn krev “strongly” and da “good” to yn ta “well”.

Verbs

Regular conjugation

Cornish verbs are highly regular and are conjugated to show distinctions of person, number, mood, tense and aspect in various combinations.
Verbal nounPresent participlePast participle
prenaow prenaprenys

Certain points should be observed about the above:
It should also be noted that vowel affection occurs in the stem of some verbs before certain endings, especially those with close front vowels, though not exclusively.
Note:

Irregular conjugation

A handful of irregular verbs exist, the most common of which are detailed here.
The most irregular verb of all is bos “be”, which is often used as an auxiliary and can be conjugated to show a number of additional distinctions not present in other verbs.
Some peculiarities of bos to be noted as follows:
Y'm beus is a combination of a reduced pronoun with dative meaning and the third person singular forms of bos, meaning literally “there is to ”, or more idiomatically “ have”. A similar construction is present in Breton. The presence of the pronoun means there are separate masculine and feminine third person singular forms but no impersonal forms, verbal noun or participles.
The irregular verb godhvos “know, can ” is based upon bos although does not utilise a habitual imperfect.
Another extremely common irregular verb also used as an auxiliary is gul “do, make”.
The verb mos “go, become” is irregular and has separate forms for the present perfect.
Similarly, dos “come, arrive” is irregular and has present perfect forms.
The irregular verbs ri “give” and dri “bring” have similar conjugations. This table give the forms of ri from which the dri forms can be composed by adding an initial d, for example rov “I give” to drov “I bring”. The only exceptions to this are that the second person singular imperatives of dri are dro, doro and doroy and that, as usual, the ow of the present participle cause provection of the d to t to give ow tri.

Conjunctions

Certain conjunctions have an additional form used when followed by a vowel, such as ha “and” becoming hag and na “than” becoming nag.

Prepositions

As in other Celtic languages, Cornish prepositions are simple or complex and may inflect to show person, number and gender. Historically, inflected prepositions derive from the contraction between a preposition and a personal pronoun.
Simple prepositions that inflect belong to one of three groups characterised by their use of the vowel a, o or i. Third person prepositional stems are sometimes slightly different from those of the first and second persons and affection sometimes occurs in the third person singular feminine. Dhe “to” and gans “with” are irregular.
Complex prepositions inflect by means of interfixes, whereby the nominal second element is preceded by a pronominal form. This is similar to how instead can become in my stead in archaic English. Mutations may be triggered following the various pronominal forms as seen in the following table.

Numbers

Cardinal numbers

Similar to other Celtic languages, Cornish has an underlying vigesimal counting system. “Two”, “three” and “four” and derivative numbers have separate masculine ' and feminine ' forms.
The numbers 21 to 39 employ the connective warn “on the” to join the smaller number to the larger, for example onan warn ugens “21”, naw warn ugens “29” and unnek warn ugens “31”. From 41 onwards, the connecting word is ha “and”, as in onan ha dew-ugens “41”, pymthek ha dew-ugens “55” and nownsek ha peswar-ugens “99”.
Cardinal numbers used to form larger numbers include:
Beyond 100, it is still possible to use multiples of ugens, such as hwegh-ugens “120”. Kans “100”, mil “1,000” and milvil “1,000,000” are all masculine numbers, for example tri mil “3,000”.

Ordinal numbers

Ordinal numbers and their abbreviations are shown below. The majority of numbers employ the ordinal suffix -ves.
10vesdegves
1akynsa11vesunnegves
2anessa12vesdewdhegves20vesugensves
3atressa, tryja13vestredhegves30vesdegves warn ugens
4apeswara14vespeswardhegves40vesdew-ugensves
5espympes15vespymtegves50veshanterkansves
6veshweghves16veshwetegves60vestri-ugensves
7vesseythves17vesseytegves70vesdegves ha tri-ugens
8vesethves18vesetegves80vespeswar-ugensves
9vesnawves19vesnownsegves90vesdegves ha peswar-ugens

Larger numbers also employ the suffix -ves.
100veskansves1,000vesmilves1,000,000vesmilvilves

In multi-word numbers, the initial smaller number joined with the connector takes the ordinal form, for example kynsa warn ugens “21st” and nownsegves ha peswar-ugens “99th”. In multiword numbers that are not joined by connecting words, the final number takes the ordinal form, for example dew-ugensves “40th”, hwegh-ugenves “120th”, tri milves “3,000th”.

Word order and focus

The default Cornish word order is verb–subject–object, although like most Celtic languages this is somewhat fluid. Cornish has a system of fronting constituents, in which parts of a sentence can be moved to the front for focus, rather than stressing them in situ as English does. This system has influenced the Anglo-Cornish dialect, heard in the distinctive questioning of dialect speakers such as “Goin’ in’ town are’ee?” and “’S bleddy ’tis”.
In description sentences of the verb bos ‘to be’, the complement is typically fronted:
Other existence sentences of bos front the verb:
Since Cornish prefers to use a ‘there is’ existence form of bos with indefinite objects, an object being definite or indefinite can result in different parts being fronted:
With other verbs, subject-fronted is the default unmarked word order. This still follows the default verb–subject–object order, since sentences of this kind were in origin relative clauses emphasising the subject:
When the sentence's object is a pronoun, it appears before the verb and after the particle a, although it can also appear after the verb for emphasis: My a’s gwel ‘I see her’, or My a’s gwel hi “I see her”.
When auxiliary verbs are used, a possessive pronoun is used with the verbal noun: My a wra hy gweles ‘I see her’, or when stressed, My a wra hy gweles hi “I see her”. In both instances, colloquial spoken Cornish may drop all but the suffixed pronouns, to give My a wel hi and My a wra gweles hi, although this is rarely written.
In questions and negative sentences, an interrogative particle and negative particle are used, respectively. These are generally fronted in neutral situations:
Subject pronouns can be placed before a negative particle for emphasis: My ny vynnav kewsel SowsnekI will not speak English’ or ’As for me, I will not speak English’.

Fronting for emphasis

Besides the “neutral” structures given above, elements of Cornish sentences can be fronted to give emphasis, or when responding to a question with requested information. Fronting involves moving the element to the beginning of the sentence. English typically achieves this by modifying tone or intonation.
There are two particles involved in fronting. The particle a is actually a relative particle used when the subject or direct object of a sentence is fronted. If anything else is fronted, usually adverbials or information headed by prepositions, the particle used is y.
QuestionResponse

  • Piw a brenas an bara?
  • Ev a’n prenas.
  • A wrug Mary y brena?
  • Na wrug, Bob a’n prenas.
  • Pyth a wruss’ta prena?
  • Keus a brenis.
  • A wruss’ta prena hemma?
  • Ny wrug vy prena hemma; henna a brenis.
  • Pyth a wruss’ta gul?
  • Prena an keus a wrugav.
  • Peur hwruss’ta y brena?
  • Dhe bymp eur y’n prenis.
  • Ple hwruss’ta y brena?
  • Y’n worvarghas y’n prenis.

Nominal syntax

Determiners precede the noun they modify, while adjectives generally follow it. A modifier that precedes its head noun often causes a mutation, and adjectives following a feminine noun are lenited. Thus:
  • benyn
  • an venyn
  • tebel venyn
  • benyn gonnyk
Genitive relationships are expressed by apposition. The genitive in Cornish is formed by putting two noun phrases next to each other, the possessor coming second. So English “The cat's mother”, or “mother of the cat”, corresponds to Cornish mamm an gath – literally, “mother the cat”; “the project manager's telephone number” is niver pellgowser menystrer an towl – literally, “number telephone manager the project”. Only the last noun in a genitive sequence can take the definite article.